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Sony unveils its fourth tablet teaser video, Rube Goldberg aficionados rejoice

We still aren’t sure what Sony’s series of teaser videos for its forthcoming S1 and S2 tablets are really all about. What we do know is that we love the films’ cheery soundtracks and the wondrous contraptions they showcase. This fourth spot has the now-familiar pale figurines wandering though a mechanical wonderland, with marbles whizzing overhead and bubbles floating about. Alas, like those that precede it, the latest video provides no new info on the slates Sony’s shilling, but feel free to enjoy the visuals in the bit of esoteric advertising after the break. Continue reading Sony unveils its fourth tablet teaser video, Rube Goldberg aficionados rejoice Sony unveils its fourth tablet teaser video, Rube Goldberg aficionados rejoice originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 01:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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RIM’s BlackBerry Torch 9810 emerges on AT&T’s website, touts ’4G’ capabilities

Well, hello beautiful! Can’t say we were expecting to see RIM launch a new BlackBerry this evening, but we’re sure there’s quite a few of you out there that’ll take it. The same BlackBerry Torch 2 that we previewed back in June has made the trek over to Ma Bell’s network, with a ‘Coming Soon’ page emerging just moments ago. AT&T claims that this is the world’s first 4G BlackBerry on its airwaves, but of course, that asterisk upside the “4G” logo couldn’t possibly be more telling . Regardless, the full-featured slider will arrive with BlackBerry 7 OS, a full QWERTY keyboard, sliding display, 1.2GHz processor, 8GB of onboard memory, room for 32GB of expandable storage, 720p video capture, inbuilt WiFi and support for the carrier’s HSPA+ network. Mum’s the word on a price and release, but you can tap that source link to get signed up for more. Gallery: RIM’s BlackBerry Torch 9810 leaks at AT&T RIM’s BlackBerry Torch 9810 emerges on AT&T’s website, touts ’4G’ capabilities originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 00:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Best Buy dishing out free Nexus S for one day only, ball and chain included

Have you been looking to get your hands on a nice slice of Gingerbread without totally wrecking your wallet? If so… your time has come. Best Buy has announced that starting tonight (August 2nd) at 11 p.m. CST — we’ll assume they meant C D T, aka midnight Eastern — it will begin offering the Google Nexus S for free (you read that right). Of course, you’ll still have to chain yourself to a two-year agreement with AT&T, Sprint, or T-Mobile to cash in on this deal, but wait a day later and the price will certainly jump back up to a full Benjamin. So set your clock, and make sure you score one either in-store or online before 11:59 p.m. CST tomorrow. Check out the full details in the PR, just past the break. [Thanks to everyone who sent this in] Continue reading Best Buy dishing out free Nexus S for one day only, ball and chain included Best Buy dishing out free Nexus S for one day only, ball and chain included originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 22:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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UK set to legalize CD and DVD copying for personal use

The fact that it hasn’t technically been legal may not have stopped many folks in the UK from ripping their CDs all these years, but it looks like there may soon be a tad less anarchy involved in that process. Reuters is reporting that the British government will announce tomorrow that it plans to legalize the copying of CDs and DVDs onto computers or portable media players for personal use — a move that will bring it up to speed with most other European countries (and the US and Canada). Of course, the key words there are “personal use.” You still won’t be legally allowed to share that music over the internet after you copy it without permission, and it’s not yet clear how the new rules will apply to DVDs (or Blu-rays) with copy protection measures — although the British Video Association unsurprisingly doesn’t seem too pleased with the changes regardless, calling them “extremely damaging.” UK set to legalize CD and DVD copying for personal use originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 22:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Boingo announces streamlined WiFi data plans with support for any two devices

Boingo’s WiFi plans may come in handy for frequent travelers, but they haven’t exactly been the most straightforward — especially if you’re using multiple devices. The company’s gone some way towards simplifying things today, however, announcing that it’s revised its unlimited WiFi data plans so that you can now use any two WiFi-enabled devices (as opposed to just two laptops) as part of the basic plan, and up to five more for an additional five bucks apiece. Unfortunately, none of those changes extend to the company’s recent partnership with GoGo for in-flight internet access, which you still have to cough up the full price for. Continue reading Boingo announces streamlined WiFi data plans with support for any two devices Boingo announces streamlined WiFi data plans with support for any two devices originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 21:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Bluetooth keyboard mod resurrects Morse code, offers a helping click to disabled (video)

Morse code may have been pushed aside in the pursuit of higher-tech cryptography , but the old dits and dahs of yore are now finding a repurposed life helping the disabled. Modding outfit Zunkworks has cobbled together an Arduino hack that pairs a Bluetooth-based, dots and dashes approach with wallet-friendly parts. Using the keyboard’s two inbuilt push-buttons, users’ clicks are decoded by the integrated Arduino and then transmitted via Bluetooth to a nearby computer. And thanks to the mod’s HID profile support, you can also enjoy this access solution on smartphones and tablets — useful for those who can “send code at 25-50 words per minute.” Yeah, that’s definitely not us. Still, we applaud the group’s efforts to make 21st century tech accessible to the handicapped and geek alike. Jump past the break for a video demo of this on / off hackjob. Continue reading Bluetooth keyboard mod resurrects Morse code, offers a helping click to disabled (video) Bluetooth keyboard mod resurrects Morse code, offers a helping click to disabled (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 20:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Zediva’s DVD rental service ordered to close shop, Hollywood pops celebratory bubbly

Zediva’s loophole-exploiting DVD rental service has just been dealt a lethal blow by Judge John F. Walter. The recent court-ordered preliminary injunction effectively halts the company’s ability to rent its library to users across the internet’s great streaming divide. Citing irreparable damages to both the nascent video on demand market and Hollywood’s bottom line , the federal judge found Zediva’s business in violation of studios’ exclusive right to public performance of copyrighted works. The bizarro Netflix alternative had been operating without the normal licensing restrictions required by the industry and despite its claims of imminent ruination, will have to close shop. For its part, the unique startup has vowed to appeal the ruling, but if that doesn’t work, at least its creators can watch No Strings Attached ad nauseum. Zediva’s DVD rental service ordered to close shop, Hollywood pops celebratory bubbly originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 19:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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FCC hails spectrum alliances with Canada and Mexico, seeks to reduce border conflicts

It’s not every day that the FCC enters into new multinational agreements, so you’ll have to forgive us for getting excited over the latest communique between Chairman Julius Genachowski and his counterparts in Canada and Mexico. After much negotiation, the regulatory heads have created a framework to resolve frequency conflicts along our nations’ borders. While the deal with Mexico only applies to the 700MHz spectrum, the agreement with Canada also covers the 800MHz range. By reducing interference and maximizing spectrum allocation, Genachowski believes “these arrangements will unleash investment and benefit consumers near the borders by enabling the rollout of 4G wireless broadband service and advanced systems for critical public safety and emergency response communications .” Once the policies become official mandates, license holders must coordinate and implement techniques to mitigate signal interference or face some nasty regulatory intervention. If you’re a sucker for policy, just leap the break for the full press release. Continue reading FCC hails spectrum alliances with Canada and Mexico, seeks to reduce border conflicts FCC hails spectrum alliances with Canada and Mexico, seeks to reduce border conflicts originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 18:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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MetroPCS will begin transition to VoLTE early next year

US carriers were quick to acknowledge their allegiance to Voice over LTE ( VoLTE ), a 4G VoIP-related technology first demonstrated in February. Ever since that time, however, talk of deployment plans have been replaced by crickets. MetroPCS was the first to break the silence, as CEO Roger Linquist announced at this morning’s quarterly earnings call that his company’s “planning to begin introducing VoLTE-capable handsets early next year to move voice as well as data traffic to [its] LTE network.” The outfit’s wasting no time making the full transition to 4G, as it’s already begun migrating its SMS and MMS services to this service. An increasing sense of urgency is likely hitting the company hard, as implementing VoLTE will ease some of the burden of its limited spectrum by devoting more bandwidth to 4G. What’s better, the anticipated timeframe may even allow MetroPCS to beat Verizon to market — which has also targeted 2012 as a launch date for its equivalent service — as well as AT&T, currently aiming for a 2013 takeoff . No matter what, we’re ecstatic to soon be flooded with more HD-clarity calls than we care to take. MetroPCS will begin transition to VoLTE early next year originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 17:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Report: data centers accounted for just 1 to 1.5 percent of electricity use last year, Google claims less than 1 percent of that

You’d think, watching companies like Apple break ground on sprawling data centers, that the number of servers powering our untethered lives was on the rise. In a different decade, you might have been right. But not this one. According to a study prepared at the request of The New York Times , the number of servers in use has declined “significantly” since 2005. That’s mostly because of the financial crisis of 2008, says lead researcher Jonathan G. Koomey of Stanford University, but we also can’t discount the effect of more efficient technologies. What’s more, he says, servers worldwide consume less energy than you might have guessed: they accounted for somewhere between 1 and 1.5 percent of global electricity use in 2010. And while Google, the king of cloud computing, has been cagey about revealing just how many servers house its treasure trove of data, the company said that of that 1 to 1.5 percent, it accounted for less than 1 percent — meaning, just a hundredth of a percent of all the electricity consumed last year. All told, data centers’ energy consumption has risen 56 percent since 2005 — a far cry from the EPAs 2007 prediction that this figure would double by 2010, with annual costs ballooning to $7.4 billion. Then again, this slower-than-expected growth could well be temporary. Though Koomey can’t specify to what extent the financial crisis and technological advancements are to blame, he insists, broadly speaking, that we’re primarily seeing fallout from the economic slowdown — a stay of execution, of sorts, for those of us rooting for energy conservation. Report: data centers accounted for just 1 to 1.5 percent of electricity use last year, Google claims less than 1 percent of that originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 16:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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